I/O Consolidation in the Data Center: A Complete Guide to Data Center Ethernet and Fibre Channel over Ethernet
by Silvano Gai; Claudio DeSanti
Cisco IOS XR Fundamentals
by Mobeen Tahir - CCIE No. 12643; Mark Ghattas - CCIE No. 19706; Dawit Birhanu - CCIE No. 5602; Syed Natif Nawaz - CCIE No. 8825
Cisco LAN Switching Configuration Handbook, Second Edition
by Steve McQuerry - CCIE No. 6108; David Jansen - CCIE No. 5952; David Hucaby - CCIE No. 4594
Building Service-Aware Networks: The Next-Generation WAN/MAN
by Muhammad Afaq Khan - CCIE No. 9070
Designing Social Interfaces, 1st Edition
by Christian Crumlish; Erin Malone
Computer Networks, Fourth Edition
by Andrew S. Tanenbaum
Virtualization For Dummies®
by Golden, Bernard
Microsoft® Office SharePoint Server® 2007 Administrator’s Companion
by Bill English; The Microsoft SharePoint Community Experts
This is the Safari online edition of the printed book.
As data centers grow in size and complexity, enterprises are adopting server virtualization technologies such as VMware, VMotion, NIC teaming, and server clustering to achieve increased efficiency of resources and to ensure business resilience. However, these technologies often involve significant expense and challenges to deal with complex multisite interconnections and to maintain the high availability of network resources and applications.
Interconnecting Data Centers Using VPLS presents Virtual Private LAN Service (VPLS) based solutions that provide high-speed, low-latency network and Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) isolation between data centers resulting in significant cost savings and a highly resilient virtualized network. The design guidance, configuration examples, and best practices presented in this book have been validated under the Cisco Validated Design (CVD) System Assurance program to facilitate faster, more reliable and more predictable deployments. The presented solutions include detailed information about issues that relate to large Layer 2 bridging domains and offer guidance for extending VLANs over Layer 3 networks using VPLS technology.
Implementing this breakthrough Data Center Interconnect (DCI) strategy will evolve your network to support current server virtualization techniques and to provide a solid foundation for emerging approaches. The book takes you from the legacy deployment models for DCI, problems associated with extending Layer 2 networks, through VPN technologies, to various MST-, EEM-, and GRE-based deployment models and beyond. Although this book is intended to be read cover-to-cover, it is designed to be flexible and allow you to easily move between chapters to develop the solution most compatible with your requirements.
Describes a variety of deployment models to effectively transport Layer 2 information, allowing your virtualization solution to operate effectively
Explains benefits and trade-offs of various solutions for you to choose the solution most compatible with your network requirements to ensure business resilience
Provides detailed design guidance and configuration examples that follow Cisco best practice recommendations tested within the CVD
This book is part of the Networking Technology Series from Cisco Press®, which offers networking professionals valuable information for constructing efficient networks, understanding new technologies, and building successful careers.
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Based on 2 Ratings
VPLS - 2009-10-11
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I agree with the prior fellow's comments:
"The book's goal is to provide architectural design and configuration guide on Virtual Private LAN Service (VPLS) based solution that use high speed and low latency network as well as Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) isolation to connect multiple data centers.
The book starts with chapters explaining the high availability clusters concept, introduction to VPLS, and implementation of traffic engineering using MPLS. If you are familiar with MPLS, these chapters are easily readable."
It delivers on these fairly well. I am first and foremost a Virtualization engineer, but found the insight that the book provides in the area of delivering highly available network architectures to be value in the extreme. Beyond the introduction chapters, the book provides reference designs & sample configurations that provide further practical guidance.
The knowledge in this book is densely packed and suffers a bit in readability because of it. Due to that, I rate this book 4/5 stars, but would recommend it to anyone responsible for network architecture & design.
A good book to explain complex VPLS design solution - 2009-08-11
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The book's goal is to provide architectural design and configuration guide on Virtual Private LAN Service (VPLS) based solution that use high speed and low latency network as well as Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) isolation to connect multiple data centers.
The book starts with chapters explaining the high availability clusters concept, introduction to VPLS, and implementation of traffic engineering using MPLS. If you are familiar with MPLS, these chapters are easily readable.
Then the book jumps into detail discussing architectural designs and configuration needed to interconnect these data centers that require a strong understanding of spanning tree protocol (STP), routing protocols (OSPF), Hot Standby Router Protocol (HSRP) redundancy, IP SLA concepts and other features such as the new VSS for Cisco 6500 switches, to follow. The book will assume that the readers already understand these concepts and will not explain them in details. Therefore, this book is absolutely not for network beginners.
The book also discusses nine different flavors of data center interconnect solutions using combinations of STP modes, local VLAN mapping and other criteria. It explains how each option works in detail and what option works for what environment. It also lists all the complete configurations needed for the aggregation switches and provider edge routers for most of the options. That is useful since I do not have to refer to the previous chapters to see parts of the configurations. . I know that many of the configurations probably can be found on the Cisco web site but it is nice to have them bundled together in one book as a reference.
The authors actually configured most of these options in their lab environment and provided the convergence test results and server clusters event logs at the end of each solutions. The book provides a lot of network diagram illustrations to help readers understand how the solution works in normal mode and in failover mode. .
The book helps me to understand many basic LAN switching concepts that are being used in this solution but with some modification, For example, a simple Ether-channel to load balance connections can be used with some traffic engineering to control load repartition of traffic. Another example will be a feature called semaphore, which for me is similar to HSRP to a degree, which can be configured with EEM script and STP to activate the backup node.
I rate this book 5 out of 5 and recommend the book for people who want to learn more about VPLS. It has a lot of helpful information that will help readers to get familiar with VPLS concept and configuration especially for interconnecting data centers.
Top Level Categories:
Networking
Sub-Categories:
Networking > Architecture and Design
Networking > Network Management
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